Epicharmus is considered to have lived within the hundred year period between c. 540 and c. 450 BC. He was a Greek dramatist and philosopher often credited with being one of the first comic writers, having originated the Doric or Sicilian comedic form. Aristotle (Poetics 5 1449b5 ) writes that he and Phormis invented comic plots (muthos).
Most of the information we have about Epicharmus comes from the writings of Athenaeus, Suidas and Diogenes Laertius, but fragments and comments come up in a host of other ancient authors as well. There have also been some papyrus finds of longer sections of text, but these are often so full of holes that it is difficult to make sense of them.
In Plato's Theaetetus, Socrates refers to Epicharmus as "the prince of Comedy" and Homer as "the prince of Tragedy", and both as "great masters of either kind of poetry".
He is also mentioned in Plato's Gorgias.
More references by ancient authors can be found discussed in Pickard-Cambridge's Dithyramb, Tragedy, Comedy and they are collected in Greek in Kassel and Austin's new edition of the fragments in Poetae Comici Graeci, (2001).
It is most likely that sometime after the 484 BC, he lived in Syracuse, and worked as a poet for the tyrants Gelo and Hiero I. The subject matter of his poetry covered a broad range, from exhortations against intoxication and laziness to such unorthodox topics as mythological burlesque, but he also wrote on philosophy, medicine, natural science, linguistics, and ethics.
Among many other philosophical and moral lessons, Epicharmus taught that the continuous exercise of virtue could overcome hereditary, so that anyone had the potential to be a good person regardless of birth.
He died in his 90s (according to a statement in Lucian, Macrobii, 25, he died at ninety-seven).
Diogenes Laertius records that there was a bronze statue dedicated to him in Syracuse, by the inhabitants, for which Theocritus composed the following inscription :
"As the bright sun excels the other stars, As the sea far exceeds the river streams: So does sage Epicharmus men surpass, Whom hospitable Syracuse has crowned."
Theocritus Epigram 18 (AP IX 60; Kassel and Austin Test. 18) is also written in his honor.
His two most famous works were Agrostinos which dealt humorously with the agricultural lifestyle, and Marriage of Hebe to Hercules, in which Hercules was portrayed as a glutton. Additional works include Odysseus automolos, Cyclops, Amykos, and Promytheus.
"The mind sees and the mind hears. The rest is blind and deaf."
"A mortal should think mortal thoughts, not immortal thoughts."
"The best thing a man can have, in my view, is health."
"The hand washes the hand: give something and you may get something."
"Then what is the nature of men? Blown up bladders!"
540 BC births | 450 BC deaths | Sicilian Greeks | Ancient Greek dramatists and playwrights | Ancient Greek poets | Sicilian Greeks
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It uses material from the
"Epicharmus of Kos".
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